The Changing Landscape of Patient Safety · “Workplace safety is inextricably linked to patient...
Transcript of The Changing Landscape of Patient Safety · “Workplace safety is inextricably linked to patient...
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The Changing Landscape of Patient Safety
Tejal Gandhi, MD, MPH, CPPS President and CEO, National Patient Safety Foundation
Associate Professor, Harvard Medical School
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Institute of Medicine’s First Quality Report: To Err Is Human – November 1999 Preventable lapses in safety: 44,000 to 98,000 Americans die each year Eighth leading cause of death in the
United States Annual cost as much as $29 billion annually
Conclusion: the majority of these problems are systemic, not the fault of individual providers
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The Safety Movement in the 2000’s Hospital-focused Key initiatives to improve safety culture (change from blame to
nonpunitive to just) Focus on increasing safety reporting Systems approach to error
– Human factors, reliability – Team training
Safety often focused on issues such as wrong-site surgery, wrong procedure, falls, medication errors
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The Joint Commission plays a key role – National Patient Safety Goals, Failure Mode and
Effects Analysis (FMEA)
Public reporting begins – Serious Reportable Events (SREs), Leapfrog,
Hospital-Acquired Infections (HAIs)
The Safety Movement in the 2000’s
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2009 Survey Results
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So where does safety go from here?
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What’s driving the future?
Hospitals face ever-increasing numbers of existing and new priorities – Healthcare Reform - Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) -
cost reduction – Health Information Technology (HIT) - meaningful use – Reducing Readmissions - bundled payment, public reporting – 30-Day All-Cause Mortality - public reporting – Hospital-Acquired Conditions (HACs) - nonpayment – AHRQ Patient Safety Indicators (PSIs) - public reporting – CMS National Hospital Quality Measures (NHQMs) – Acute
Myocardial Infarction, Congestive Heart Failure, Pneumonia, Surgical Care Improvement Project and more to come
Population Health/Care across the continuum is
a new focus
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The Changing Landscape of Safety
All of the same concepts are still relevant and extremely important – CULTURE!! – Reporting – Systems – Regulations – Transparency
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Changing Landscape: New or Expanded Focus
1. Care across the continuum 2. Patient/family engagement and experience 3. The workforce 4. Transparency and metrics 5. Use of health information technology
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Changing Landscape: 1
Care across the Continuum
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Ambulatory Safety- What is “Ambulatory”? Most studies done in primary care setting But we can’t forget…
– Specialty practices – Ambulatory surgical centers – Dialysis centers – Nursing homes – Rehabs – Care in the home (including large variety of devices) – And many others…
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What is different about ambulatory care?
Long feedback loops Episodic (from provider and patient perspective) Signal to noise ratio is low Widely distributed Limited resources, redundancies Patients and providers have many degrees of freedom
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What do we know about ambulatory safety?
Medication safety Transitions of care Missed and delayed diagnosis
– Test result follow-up – Referral management
Just the tip of the iceberg . . .
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Outpatient Medication Safety
Adverse drug events are common and often ameliorable (25% of patients in one study)
1,879 prescriptions reviewed – Medication errors 143 (7.6%)
• Potential ADEs 62 (3%) – Life-threatening 1 (2%) – Serious 15 (24%) – Significant 46 (74%)
Gandhi TK et al. NEJM 2003, JGIM 2005
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Impact of E-Prescribing
Study of 15 providers before and after implementation of e-prescribing – Error rates reduced from 42/100 prescriptions to 6/100
prescriptions
Pre-post study in multispecialty practice – Prescription errors decreased from 18% to 8% – Largest reductions:
• Illegibility • Inappropriate abbreviations • Missing information
Kaushal R et al. JGIM 2010
Devine E et al. JAMIA 2010
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Nonadherence In one study of 195,000 newly prescribed e-prescriptions,
only 72% were filled – Nonadherence was common for medications for chronic conditions
such as hypertension, diabetes, hyperlipidemia
“Medication nonadherence: A diagnosable and
treatable condition” – Often undetected and untreated – Clinicians not trained to screen or treat – Need to understand patient beliefs and values – Now tied into quality measures
Fischer M. et al. JGIM 2010
Marcum ZA et al. JAMA editorial 2013
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Missed and Delayed Diagnosis Errors
Most common type of ambulatory malpractice cases
Most-often missed cancer
Occur in primary care practices
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Physician performs history / physical
Performance of tests
Interpretation of tests
Receipt / transmittal of test results
Follow-up plan & referral (if indicated)
Patient notes problem and seeks care
Diagnostic Process of Care in Ambulatory Setting
Ordering of diagnostic / lab tests
Patient adherence to plan
Gandhi TK et al. Ann Intern Med 2006
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Physician performs history / physical
Performance of tests
Interpretation of tests
Receipt / transmittal of test results
Follow-up plan & referral (if indicated)
Patient notes problem and seeks care
Diagnostic Process of Care in Ambulatory Setting
Ordering of diagnostic / lab tests
Patient adherence to plan
9%
42%
55%
9%
37%
13%
45%
17%
Gandhi TK et al. Ann Intern Med 2006
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Preventing Missed and Delayed Diagnosis Errors
Strategies to reduce cognitive errors – Double checks – Decision support
Strategies to reduce systems errors – Closed-loop test result management – Closed-loop referral management
Patient engagement
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Transitions of Care
Handoffs and transitions are particularly high risk for adverse events – Adverse events after discharge – Medication issues – Pending tests – Unresolved medical issues
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Strategies to error-proof high-risk transitions
Improve handoffs in care – Standard templates for transitions – Improved discharge processes and handoffs (SBAR) – Improved safeguards for post-discharge period
(phone calls, appointments, etc.) – Medication reconciliation
• TJC requirements • Should be done in inpatient and outpatient settings
All potentially leading to reduced readmissions!
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Safety Issues in Nursing Homes
Nearly 1 in 3 Medicare beneficiaries who went to SNFs (35 days or fewer; avg 15 days) experienced an adverse event (OIG report 2014)
– 59% preventable; many as a result of failure to monitor or delay in care
– More than half of the residents who experienced harm were hospitalized
– Most common: Medication related (37%), resident care (37%), infections (26%)
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Safety Issues in Ambulatory Surgery
Surgical site infection rate in ambulatory surgery is 3/1000 procedures However, millions of procedures done each year
so still significant numbers affected Owens et al. JAMA 2014
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Safety Issues in Home Care
Home care adverse event rate per client-year is 10% 56% of AEs were judged preventable
– The most frequent were injuries from falls, wound infections, psychosocial, behavioral or mental health problems, and medication errors.
– Clients' decisions or actions contributed to 48.4% of AEs, informal caregivers 20.4% of AEs, and healthcare personnel 46.2% of AEs.
Blais et al. BMJ Qual Saf 2013
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Safety Issues in Office Procedure Settings
Checklists not uniformly used in the office settings that perform procedures (small study)
Top barriers: – No incentive to use a checklist (78%) – No mandate from a federal or local regulatory agency (44%) – Time consuming (33%) – Lack of training (33%)
Shapiro, et al. Am Soc Healthcare Risk Mgmt
Need more research to better identify safety concerns across all settings
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Outpatient Safety Infrastructure
Many principles in place in inpatient settings – Culture change – Event identification and analysis – Systems approach – Proactive assessment
Need to transfer these to all outpatient settings – Procedure areas – Nursing homes, rehab centers – Ambulatory and office
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Changing Landscape: 2
Patient/Family Engagement and
Experience
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Safety Is Personal: Partnering with Patients and Families for the Safest Care
From NPSF’s Lucian Leape Institute Roundtable on Consumer Engagement Available for Download at http://www.npsf.org/lli-safety-is-personal/
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Background on the Issue What is patient and family engagement? “Patients, families, their representatives, and health professionals working in active partnership at various levels across the health care system—in direct care, organizational design and governance, and policy making—to improve health and health care.” (adapted from Carman 2013): Studies link patient engagement with patient satisfaction, safer care, improved work experience for caregivers, and better health outcomes.
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Barriers to Patient and Family Engagement Fragmented health care system Historically paternalistic/dysfunctional culture in health care Lack of understanding/knowledge/commitment on the part
of health care leaders to embrace patient and family engagement as an essential part of their mission
Workflow design flaws Lack of effective engagement tools and training Lack of awareness among patients and families Problems with health literacy, limited social support, or fear
of speaking up on the part of patients
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Observations from the LLI Roundtable
Move the system from asking patients “What’s the matter?” to “What matters to you?”
It is very hard to speak up, even for the most empowered
Burden cannot be off-loaded to patients Engagement is a shared responsibility Patients who are alone are at highest risk Don’t scare the patient – they need to feel they are
safe and do not have to be constantly vigilant
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Whitepaper Recommendations Based on evidence that patient engagement improves patient safety For Leaders of Health Care Systems Establish patient and family engagement as a core value for the
organization Involve patients and families as equal partners in all organizational
improvement and redesign activities Educate and train all personnel to be effective partners with patients
and families Partner with patient advocacy groups and other community
resources
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Whitepaper Recommendations For Health Care Clinicians and Staff Provide information and tools that support patients and families to
engage effectively in their own care Engage patients as equal partners in safety improvement and care
design activities Provide clear information, apologies, and support to patients and
families when things go wrong
For Health Care Policy Makers Involve patients in all policy-making committees and programs Develop, implement, and report safety metrics that foster
transparency, accountability, and improvement Require that patients be involved in setting and implementing the
research agenda
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Tools for Health Systems
Patient family advisory councils Shared decision making tools Health literacy tools/training Bedside rounds Patient activated rapid response systems Patient reporting systems Patients on root cause analyses
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Whitepaper Recommendations For Patients, Families, and the Public While placing the responsibility for patient safety on health care providers and organizations, the report also urges patients, families, and the public to view themselves as full and active members of the health care system and recommends the following:
Ask questions about the risks and benefits of recommendations until you understand the answers
Don’t go alone to the hospital or to doctor visits Document and share your medications, including names, why, how,
and dose with all providers Be very sure you understand the plan of action for your care Repeat back to clinicians in your own words what you think they
have told you Arrange to get any recommended lab tests done before a visit Determine who is in charge of your care
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Changing Landscape: 3
A Focus on the Workforce
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Joy and meaning are not sentimental notions “Workplace safety is inextricably linked to
patient safety. Unless caregivers are given the protection, respect, and support they need, they are more likely to make errors, fail to follow safe practices, and not work well in teams.”
Joy and Meaning in Work
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Currently health care workers suffer harm – Emotionally (bullying, demeaning) – Physically (injuries, assault)
• Up to 1/3 of nurses experience back or musculoskeletal injuries in a year
– Stress from complex and demanding tasks under severe time constraints
– Costs of burnout, litigation, lost work hours, turnover are high
Joy and Meaning in Work
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Injury and Illness Rates, 1989–2011
In 2011, U.S. hospitals recorded 58,860 work-related injuries and illnesses that caused employees to miss work.1 In terms of lost-time case rates, it is more hazardous to work in a hospital than in construction or manufacturing. “Days away from work” include only the more severe injuries, and they do not account for injuries where an employee continues to work, but on modified duty. Thus, the problem is even larger than the graph below suggests.
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Vulnerable Workplaces Physical Harm
Health care workforce injuries 30 times higher than other industries
More FTE days are lost due to occupational illness and injury in health care
each year than in industries such as mining, machinery manufacturing and construction
76% of nurses in national survey indicated that unsafe working conditions interfere with the delivery of quality care
An RN or MD as a 5-6 times higher chance of being assaulted than a cab driver in an urban area
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Vulnerable Workplaces Psychological Harm
Lack of respect - A root cause, if not THE root cause, of dysfunctional cultures - 95% of nurses report it; 100% of medical students report it Lack of support Lack of appreciation Non-value add work Production pressures Scheduling demands and fatigue Poor design of work environments and work flows
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Costs of Inaction Burnout, lost work hours, turnover, inability to attract
newcomers to caring professions
Less vigilance with regard to safety practices – both for patients and for workforce
Increased opportunities for medical errors
Impact on patient experience
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What are the seven things an organization must do? 1. Develop and embody shared core values of mutual respect and
civility; transparency and truth telling; safety of all workers and patients; and alignment and accountability from the boardroom through the front lines.
2. Adopt the explicit aim to eliminate harm to the workforce and to patients.
3. Commit to creating a high-reliability organization (HRO) and demonstrate the discipline to achieve highly reliable performance.
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What are the seven things an organization must do? – cont. 4. Create a learning and improvement system and adopt
evidence-based management skills for reliability.
5. Establish data capture, database, and performance metrics for accountability and improvement.
6. Recognize and celebrate the work and accomplishments of the workforce, regularly and with high visibility.
7. Support industry-wide research to design and conduct studies that will explore issues and conditions in health care that are harming our workforce and patients.
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A Culture of Respect
When disrespectful behavior occurs, it must be addressed consistently and transparently
Must establish unequivocally the expectation that everyone is entitled to be treated with courtesy, honesty, respect, and dignity – The code must be enforced fairly through a clear and
explicit process and applied consistently regardless of rank or station
Leape L, et al. Academic Medicine, Vol. 87, No. 7 / July 2012
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Positive Psychology and Resiliency
Martin Seligman – Created field of positive psychology
Negatives scream; positives whisper – Hard wired to remember the negative
Bryan Sexton, Duke Patient Safety Center – “Three Good Things” – Lower burnout, depression; higher happiness; better
work-life balance; improved sleep quality
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Positive Deviance
Focus on errors, harm, and near misses sends negative messages Now is the time to focus on optimistic signals to
clinicians, focusing on the behaviors, processes, and systems contributing to resilient, safety care Healthcare professionals need constructive
praise and positive messages Lawton R, et al. BMJ Qual Saf
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Paul O’Neill ALCOA Example: Can every person in your organization answer YES to the following questions each day? 1. Am I treated with dignity and respect by everyone, every day,
by everyone I encounter, without regard to race, ethnicity, nationality, gender, religious belief, sexual orientation, title, pay grade, or number of degrees?
2. Do I have the things I need: education, training, tools, financial support, encouragement, so I can make a contribution to this organization…that gives meaning to my life?
3. Am I recognized and thanked for what I do?
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The Kaiser Workplace Safety Index The index is linked directly to workplace safety
injuries
Can be used to predict vulnerable departments Identify areas to improve in the work
environment in order to potentially prevent injuries Simpler and more straightforward direction than
previous indices
Slides courtesy of Kathy Gerwig - Kaiser Permanente Vice President, Employee Safety, Health and Wellness and Environmental Stewardship Officer
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The Kaiser Workplace Safety Index The 3 Rs: Resources, Respect, and Recognition
Workplace Safety Index
28. Necessary steps are taken in my department or work unit to ensure employee and physician safety.
41. My immediate supervisor recognizes me when I do a good job.
5. Kaiser Permanente provides the resources necessary for me to work effectively (hardware, tools, equipment, supplies, etc.).
19. The people with whom I work treat each other with respect despite differences.
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2013 Higher Scores = Lower Workplace Injuries
Wor
kpla
ce S
afet
y In
jury
Rat
e
People Pulse Workplace Safety Index
Bottom 20% WPS Index
Top 20% WPS Index
Injury rates 56% lower
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Changing Landscape: 4
Increased Transparency and Metrics That Matter
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A practiced value in everything we do
The most important characteristic of a safe culture
A precondition to safety
Transparency
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Shining a Light: Safer Health Care Through Transparency
From the NPSF Lucian Leape Institute Roundtable on Transparency Published January 20, 2015
Available for download at http://www.npsf.org/transparency
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The Four Interrelated Domains of Transparency
Between clinicians and patients
(e.g., disclosure after a medical error)
Among clinicians (e.g., peer review)
With the public (e.g., public reporting of safety
data)
Among organizations
(e.g., regional collaboratives)
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Transparency With patients and families
– Clinical transparency re: shared decision making, risks and benefits
– Adverse events/early disclosure – Financial incentives
With colleagues
– Sharing performance data, adverse events between providers, departments, and at all levels of the organization
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Transparency Between organizations
– Quality, safety data – Adverse event data – Patient Safety Organizations (PSOs), HIT Safety
Center – Credentialing – Medicare claims data
With the public – Quality, safety, cost measures for doctors or institutions
• Most websites are confusing and hard to follow • “National hospital ratings systems share few common scores and
may generate confusion instead of clarity” – No hospital rated as a high performer by all four national rating
systems Austin, et al. Health Affairs 2015
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Barriers to Transparency Fears about conflict, disclosure, and potential negative effects
on reputation and finances
Lack of a pervasive safety culture and the leadership commitment needed to create it
Stakeholders with a strong interest in maintaining the status quo
Lack of reliable data and standards for reporting and assessing
clinician behavior regarding transparency
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Report Recommendations
39 total recommendations
Specific call to action for leaders, CEOs, and boards of health care organizations, AHRQ and NQF, accreditation bodies, CMS, etc.
• Recommendations fall into the 4 levels of transparency as well as specific recommendations for Leadership and Measurement
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Actions for All Stakeholders
1. Disclose all conflicts of interest. 2. Provide patients with reliable, useful information. 3. Present data from perspective and needs of patients
and families. 4. Create organizational cultures that support
transparency at all levels. 5. Share lessons learned and adopt best practices from
peer organizations. 6. Expect core competencies regarding accurate
communication with patients, families, other clinicians and organizations, and the public.
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Actions for Organizational Leadership: Leaders and Boards of Health Organizations
7. Prioritize transparency, safety, and continuous
learning and improvement. 8. Frequently and actively review comprehensive safety
performance data. 9. Be transparent about board membership. 10. Link hiring, firing, promotion, and leader
compensation to results in cultural transformation and transparency.
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Metrics What should we be measuring for ambulatory or
cross-continuum safety? – Measures that matter: to clinicians,
administration, patients and families? How do we capture patient reported
outcomes/measures that matter to patients? – Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute
(PCORI) How do we create metrics that are useful and not
overwhelming?
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Changing Landscape: 5
Optimizing the Use of HIT
to Improve Safety
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Handwriting
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67
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Optimize the Use of HIT
We know that some technologies reduce errors significantly – Computerized provider order entry (CPOE) – Barcoding – Electronic prescribing – Handoff tools – Test result management systems – Referral management systems
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Use of EHRs in ambulatory care
16.9%
21.8% 24.9%
34.8% 39.6%
48.1%
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
35%
40%
45%
50%
2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Basic or ComprehensiveEHR
Incentives start
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Use of EHRs among U.S. Hospitals
9.1% 11.9% 15.2%
26.6%
44.6%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Basic or Comprehensive EHR
Incentives start
Slides courtesy of A. Jha; DesRoches et al. Health Affairs 2013
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Optimize the Use of HIT Need to optimize these systems
– Reduce over-alerting – Variability across vendors – Improve interoperability
Also, we know there can be unintended consequences – Clinical documentation/cut and paste
• 16% of attendings' notes, 8% of residents' notes, and 38% of nurses' notes went unread by other users, and, overall, 16% of notes were never read by anyone
Hripcsak et al. JAMIA 2011 – Accurate medication and problem lists
• Who owns them?
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Unintended Consequences: Inpatient CPOE
Workflow/work-arounds More work/new work Communication Overdependence on technology Shift in power Never-ending technology demands Emotions New errors Cost creep
Ash JS, Sittig DF, Poon EG, et al. JAMIA 2007
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Unintended Consequences Study showed that 10% of electronic
prescriptions had errors – 1/3 with potential for harm – Most frequent were omission errors – Significant variation across different vendor systems
Forcing functions, decision support, and calculators could reduce these errors Always a continuous improvement opportunity
Nanji, et al. JAMIA 2011
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EHR as a source of burnout For many physicians, the current state of EHR
technology worsened professional satisfaction in multiple ways – Poor usability – Time consuming data entry – Interference with face to face patient care – Inefficient and less fulfilling work – Degradation of clinical documentation
» RAND study 2013: Factors Affecting Professional Physician Satisfaction and Their
Implications for Patient Care, Health Systems, and Health Policy
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EHRs and Burnout
Primary care physicians using an EMR with a moderate number of functions report more stress and less job satisfaction than physicians with a low number of EMR functions
Babbott S, et al. JAMIA 2014
News headlines – “Hospital nurses forced to develop creative
workarounds to deal with EHR system flaws” – “Nurses not happy with hospital EHRs”
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Sociotechnical Model 8 components
– Hardware and software – Clinical content – Human computer interface – People – Workflow and communication – Policies, procedures, culture (internal) – Rules, regulations (external) – Measurement and monitoring
Sittig, Singh BMJ Qual Safety 2010
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Optimize the Use of HIT
National focus – Meaningful use incentives/certification – IOM report 2011 “Health IT and Patient Safety”
• User-centered design principles • Promote sharing of safety issues • Criteria to judge the safe use of HIT • Mechanism for reporting HIT related adverse events
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Optimize the Use of HIT
ONC HIT safety plan 2013 (building on IOM report) includes the following: – Make it easier to report HIT hazards – Conduct post marketing surveillance – Establish HIT patient safety priorities for research – R&D for tools and best practices for implementation
ONC SAFER guides 2013 ECRI Collaborative 2014
– Sharing and analyzing HIT safety hazards/taxonomies
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Optimize the Use of Health IT
FDASIA Health IT Report 2014 Recommended the creation of a Health IT Safety
Center – Goal of assisting in the creation of a sustainable,
integrated health IT learning system
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Boston Globe 2014 Partners Healthcare launches $1.2B electronic health records
system
“At the core of all of this is patient safety” COO Dr. Ron Walls
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Conclusions The landscape of patient safety is changing
– Scope (cross-continuum) – Broader definition of safety: “How care should be” – Incentives/penalties
Key to focus on evolving areas – Care across the continuum – Patient engagement – The workforce – Transparency – Tools such as HIT
Patient safety is more important than ever – Need to ensure the safest care and experience for patients while
trying to reduce costs and reform care